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Book Review: Witch Hunter: Into the Outside by J. Z. Foster

Witch Hunter: Into the Outside by J. Z. Foster

CreateSpace, 2017

ISBN-13: 978-1974522255

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

 

Witch Hunter: Into the Outside by J.Z. Foster is a tongue-in-cheek, ghoulish farce.  Richard, a picked-upon, chubby nebbish, is a member of a group of nerds dedicated to combating supernatural evil.  He suspects that the members are only half serious about their rituals, array of holy weapons and clandestine attacks against evil.  Richard entices Beth, an ambitious, would-be, TV reporter, and Ted, her cameraman, to accompany them on a hunt for a local witch.

Although Richard’s goal is to track down the warlock with a sanctified knife, a necklace with a cross, holy water and a book of spells, none of the small group expects anything to come from the expedition. To their shock, they encounter a series of horrors, including a wight with an insatiable, ravenous appetite, a noxious, deceptive daeva, and murderous sankai with faces of children and bodies of animals.   The confrontations escalate into a showdown with a plague warlock, who has caused stillbirths, deformed births in animals, and other catastrophes in their local community.

With the exception of Richard, most of the characters are one-dimensional, but readers will be caught up in the fast-placed plot.  The chapters alternate between the witch hunters’ increasingly harrowing adventures and Richard’s jailhouse interrogation after he is accused of murdering Beth.  Readers will empathize with his struggle to confront his self-doubt, fears and loneliness.  As Beth wrote,

“He was more than the coward he though he was, or the fumbling nervous man he appeared to be.  Richard was proof that we could all become something greater.  When faced with the impossible, Richard stood.  Richard was the hope of man, and proof that our destinies are unwritten.  Richard was proof that our fates are our own.”

Highly recommended.

Contains: rare obscenity

Reviewed by Robert D. Yee

Graphic Novel Review: Straitjacket by El Torres, art by Guillermo Sanna

Straitjacket TP

Straitjacket by El Torres, art by Guillermo Sanna

Amigo Comics, 2016

ISBN: 9788416486199

Available: Trade paperback (direct from Amigo Comics), comiXology ebook

As a child, Alexandra Wagner ritually murdered her twin brother, Alexander. She was subsequently institutionalized and believes she protects the real world against “The Outer Darkness”, with the help of her brother on the other side. The doctors and hospital orderlies don’t believe her, of course, chalking up her cryptic words and gestures as simply signs of her insanity. Who could believe the ravings of someone diagnosed with mental illness? Dr. T. certainly doesn’t until she attacks and kills another patient, and the orderly dispatched to restrain her swears she disappeared right in front of him. The good doctor returns home after a long day, only to find Alex waiting for him.

This is the second series I have read by El Torres. He is a great storyteller, weaving impossible stories where the supernatural intrudes in the real world in fascinating and disturbing ways. Sanna’s artwork adds the perfect horrific atmosphere for Alex’s story. The art is primarily black and white, with sprays of red to indicate certain things to the reader, like identifying which realm certain creatures or characters are in or setting the mood.

If you like horror that explores the concepts of death and madness, you need to pick up Straitjacket. Highly recommended.

Contains: blood, gore, madness, nudity

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker

 

Help A Reader Out: A Possessed Girl In A Convent Turns Thanksgiving Dinner Into Feces

Well, this is different.

Delores writes:

 

I am looking for a horror book that was published between 1980-81. It was a paranormal horror book.

It was about a young woman who breaks her engagement and joined a convent under the influence of a demon. When she get to the convent she scare the (sisters) nuns with paranormal activities like levitation, changing thanksgiving dinner into feces, and having sex with imps. In the end, she climbs on the top of a building and pours gas over herself and light a match. She dies but her skin did not burn.

A priest tried to save her but failed. He believed the foul spirit was in her hidden since she was a child of five.

I would really like to find this book and buy it. Hope you can help.

 

Can anyone help Delores find this book?